A pair of complimentary wraps that can be used in the self-help rehabilitation of a joint (e.g., shoulder) or an affected limb (e.g., arm) is herein disclosed. Each member of the pair of wraps includes indicia and a set of instructions through which the individual is guided as to the use and performance of exercise routines for rehabilitative extension and/or exercise of a effected joint or muscle. In one of the preferred embodiments of this invention, each wraps is configured to permit the ends of the fingers to extend from the wrap; and, a complimentary "hook and loop" array is affixed to each of the palm side and backhand side of each wrap, respectively. This diversity of treatment in each such array permits a wrap on one hand to couple with either the palm or backhand surface the complimentary wrap on the opposite hand, and thereby effect movement of the enabled hand/arm to extend and flex the disabled hand/arm.
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1. In a self-help rehabilitation device comprising an ensemble of complimentary components wherein means are attached to each hand of an individual suffering a localized injury or incapacity relative to one side of his body so as to enable movement of one side of the individual's body to effect movement of an incapacitated limb or joint associated with an incapacitated limb, the improvement comprising:
A pair of complimentary wraps wherein each wrap is configured to (a) fit an enabled hand and a disabled hand and (b) adapted for releasable coupling to one another via a complimentary array of "hook and loop" material affixed to each wrap, said array of "hook and loop" material being affixed to each of the palm and backhand surfaces of each wrap of said complimentary pair so as to permit releasable coupling of a palm of one member of said pair to either a palm or backhand surface of another member of said wrap pair; and wherein said array of "hook" and "loop" material on each of said palm and backhand surface of each member of said pair of complimentary wraps is the same where one such wrap of said complimentary pair is provided with an exposed array of "hook" material and the other wrap of said complimentary pair is provided with an exposed array of "loop" material.
4. In a self-help rehabilitation device comprising an ensemble of complimentary components wherein means are attached to each hand of an individual suffering a localized injury or incapacity relative to one side of his body so as to enable movement of one side of the individual's body to effect movement of an incapacitated limb or joint associated with an incapacitated limb, the improvement comprising:
A pair of complimentary wraps wherein each wrap is configured to (a) fit an enabled hand and a disabled hand and (b) adapted for releasable coupling to one another via a complimentary array of "hook and loop" material affixed to each wrap, said array of "hook and loop" material being affixed to each of the palm and backhand surfaces of each wrap of said complimentary pair so as to permit releasable coupling of a palm of one member of said pair to either a palm or backhand surface of another member of said wrap pair; and wherein said array of "hook" and "loop" material on each of said palm and backhand surface of each member of said pair of complimentary wraps is the same where one such wrap of said complimentary pair is provided with an exposed array of "hook" material and the other wrap of said complimentary pair is provided with an exposed array of "loop" material, where: (A) one member of said pair comprises a generally elliptical shape with an array of hooks disposed on one end of the interior of the member, and the exterior of the member comprising three sections of arrays of loop material wherein two such sections are disposed on opposite ends of the exterior of the member and one section is approximately centered on the member, and (B) the other member of said pair comprises a generally elliptical shape having an interior component comprising two sections of arrays of loop material located at the opposed ends of the interior of the member, and an exterior component comprising three sections of arrays of hooks disposed thereon wherein two such sections are disposed on opposite ends of the exterior of the member and one section is approximately centered on the member. 2. The improved self-help rehabilitation device of
3. The improved self-help rehabilitation device of
5. The improved self-help rehabilitation device of
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This patent application is a continuation-in-part application of patent application U.S. Ser. No. 09/909,323, filed Jul. 20, 2001 entitled Rehabilitation & Exercise System.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to an article of manufacture. More specifically, this invention relates to a device in the form of a complimentary pair of gloves that have been modified to permit one enabled arm of an individual to exercise a disabled arm of the same individual.
2. Background of Invention
Generally, debilitating injuries to muscles, joints and the spine can affect an individual's limb. Often, moderate to extensive rehabilitative care is needed to regain full use of the affected limb. Even if such rehabilitative care is available, the limited amount of time a therapist can devoted to an individual within a given therapy session is limited by both the resources available and the medical expense incidental to such care. One of the more problematic injuries sustained, and the rehabilitative care required for recuperation of full range of motion, is injury to one's shoulder.
Shoulders are the most movable, and one of the most fragile, joints in the human body. A shoulder has a range of motion that no other joint in the body comes even close to matching. It is the shoulders' flexibility that enables the arms to be useful in a variety of activities. Although the shoulder is an excellent positioner for the arm, it is not a good anchor. The shoulder's flexibility makes it prone to sudden injury and chronic wear and tear. Often someone with pain in the arm, hand, or neck may have trouble moving the shoulder. Likewise, shoulder pain can affect arm and hand movement. It is natural to react to shoulder pain by not moving the shoulder, which can result in almost total loss of the ability to move the shoulder at all. Fortunately, a doctor, sometimes with the aid of a physical therapist or occupational therapist, can almost always treat shoulder problems successfully, particularly if the patient follows a recommended exercise program designed to keep the shoulder in motion.
The shoulder is also very vulnerable to dysfunction following neurologic disease or trauma, such as a cerebral vascular accident (stroke) or traumatic brain injury. Following a stroke or head injury, patients frequently experience paralysis on one side of their body, referred to as hemiplegia. Prior to injury, the shoulder is one joint in our body which compromises stability for mobility. Following a stroke or head injury, the already unstable joint loses the muscular stability that maintains the joint integrity. As a result, the head of the humerus drops out of the glenoid fossa, resulting in what is known as a subluxed shoulder or subluxation. Furthermore, due to cortical damage, patients are frequently left with sensory impairments or substantial pain in this region.
Occupational therapists or physical therapists are the rehabilitation professionals to whom patients are referred by their physicians to treat these motor and sensory deficits. Treatment typically consists of specific neurodevelopmental techniques to facilitate normalized muscle tone, increase range of motion, decrease pain, and improve coordination and eventually strength. Before normal movement can be attained, the motor and sensory dysfunction, as well as the pain at the shoulder joint, must be treated. Typical treatment includes techniques such as weight bearing, joint approximation and proprioceptive input through the joint to increase muscular tone in order to decrease the joint separation (subluxation) and pain. Compensatory aids, such as static arm slings are sometimes used to help with positioning of the arm as rehabilitation progresses. However, these slings have not typically been therapeutic and are fraught with controversy as they place the arm in a bent and nonfunctional position. Furthermore, they typically facilitate spasticity, which is contraindicated for the hemiplegic arm.
While occupational and physical therapies are effective ways to treat symptoms of diseases, injuries, and disabilities of various types, they typically require an extremely long period of time before the patient reaches full or significant partial recovery. In part, this may be due to the short period of time spent in therapy, which typically may only be one hour a day. In most cases, it is only during this time period of occupational or physical therapy that the patient is properly exercising the necessary muscles in order to recuperate from the disease, injury or disability so that the patient can regain use of the affected limb or extremity. Therefore, it would be desirable in the present invention to increase the amount of time that a patient spends in therapeutic movements of the affected limb. In addition, it is desirable in the present invention to provide a patient with the ability to continue therapeutic movements throughout the day, even after leaving the supervision of the physical therapist, and more particularly, to have such therapeutic movements occur in response to normal every day activities or movements of a non-affected extremity.
The limited benefits available from abbreviated periods of physical therapy have not gone unappreciated and a number of devices have been proposed wherein the disabled individual is permitted to assist himself in his rehabilitation.
The following patents are representatives of such self-help rehabilitative devices:
U.S. Pat. No. 5,203,763 (to Lajiness-O'Neill, issued Apr. 20, 1993) discloses a dynamic sling or harness comprising an orthotic device which promotes glenohumeral joint integrity, normalization of muscular tone, and movement for patients with hemiparesis and hemiplegia following central nervous system dysfunction. Movement of the affected extremity is accomplished by active or passive shoulder flexion and/or horizontal adduction of the non-affected extremity from approximately 5 degrees to 90 degrees. Specifically, a cuff is worn on the non-affected extremity which attaches via webbing to a cable. Movement of the non-affected extremity activates a small and effective pull of approximately ¼" to ½" of the cable, which courses over a shoulder pad and through a cable guide attached to the shoulder pad by hook and loop material means, such as VELCRO. The cable eventually terminates onto a buckle which is attached by webbing to a neoprene cuff on the affected extremity. The Lajiness-O'Neill dynamic sling provides therapeutic benefit and aids patients with improved joint positioning through its dynamic and continuous mechanisms. The Lajiness-O'Neill device also enables the patient to provide continuous and intermittent joint approximation and proprioceptive sensory input to the hemiparetic or hemiplegic shoulder while wearing the dynamic sling.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,241,952 (to Ortiz, issued Sep. 7, 1993) discloses a therapeutic range-of-motion exercise device having a flat rectangular surface board with intersecting grooves routed into the top surface in patterns of, for example, a half circle, a straight line, and a straight line at a 45-degree angle. These patterns may vary from model to model in order to provide the user with progressively difficult patterns to increase rehabilitation benefits. The user places his hand into the hand guide, a flat hand-shaped device with a depression routed into the top surface for comfort, and a double set of hook and loop straps (VELCRO) to secure the hand to the guide. A capped bolt protruding from the bottom of the guide slides into the grooves in the top surface of the board and the user pushes the handguide along these grooves, enabling him to stretch and rotate the arm and shoulder in a full range of motion. The range-of-motion board will accommodate the right or left arm of the patient.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,768,710 (to Williams, issued Jun. 23, 1998) discloses an exercise and rehabilitation device consisting of a weighted pair of gloves, each glove having a permanently affixed weighted section on the back-hand side of the glove and paired contoured weights which encircle the end of each individual finger and thumb sleeve. The digit sleeves are open ended to expose the individuals fingertips. A hook-and-pile attachment strip on the palm of the glove is operatively associated with a hook-and-pile covered cylindrical weight which can be detachably grasped by the wearer. A weighted wrist support strap detachably secures the glove to the individual's hand.
As is evident from the self-help therapy devices discussed above, each involves the user effecting movement of an impaired limb through some motion or movement of the unimpaired appendage. Such self-help movement is intended to improve range of motion or to restore/preserve muscle tone in the impaired appendage and joint. Notwithstanding such efforts, each of the prior art devices is relatively cumbersome, and/or requires multiple accessories and/or substantial dedicated space to house such accessories. Accordingly, there continues to exist a need for a simple yet effective self-help rehabilitation device that provides an individual having partial or localized impairment with the means to effectively improve range of motion of a joint and/or cause flexure of muscles without the assistance of another, and in an environment without additional accessories/supporting contrivance.
It is the object of this invention to remedy that above as well as related deficiencies in the prior art.
More specifically, it is the principal object of this invention to provide a pair of complimentary gloves wherein each member of such pair is capable of releasable coupling to the other.
It is but another object of the present invention to provide a complimentary pair of gloves wherein the gloves are in form of wraps having no digital members.
It is another object of this invention to provide a pair of complimentary gloves that can be releasably coupled to one another at more than one position.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide a pair of complimentary gloves wherein each member of the complimentary pair includes indicia associated with each glove to assist in their cooperative use.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide a pair of complimentary gloves in the form of a wrap, if a fingered or non fingered conventionally shaped mitten-style glove is too difficult for an intended user to wear, wherein each member of the wrap can be releasably coupled to one another, and at more than one position.
The above and related objects are achieved by a pair complimentary gloves that can be used in the self-help rehabilitation of a joint (e.g., shoulder) or an effected limb (e.g., arm). Each member of the pair of gloves includes indicia and a set of instructions in which the individual is guided as to how to use the gloves, and as to certain exercise routines for rehabilitative extension and/or exercise of an affected joint or muscle. In one of the preferred embodiments of this invention, each glove is configured to permit the ends of the fingers to extend from the palm; and, a complimentary "hook and loop" array affixed to each member of the glove pair, on each of the palm side and backhand side of each glove, respectively. More specifically, each pair of gloves includes a "hook" array on one member of each pair, and a "loop" array the other member of such pair. In the preferred embodiments of this invention, each of the palm and backhand surface of a single glove are treated the same, that is a single glove has either a "loop" or a "hook" array on its palm and backhand. This diversity of treatment in each array permits a glove on one hand to couple with either the palm or backhand surface of the complimentary glove on the opposite hand. In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the pair of complimentary gloves is in the form of a generally elliptical-shaped wrap, if a fingered or non fingered conventionally shaped mitten-style glove is too difficult for an intended user to wear. A thumb hole is provided as a means for securing the wrap about the hand on one's thumb. Each wrap is secured about the hand with "loop" or "hook" arrays on the palm and backside. Visual indicium is optionally added to facilitate use depending upon the strength of the wearer.
The figures which accompany this application, and referenced herein, depict representative embodiments of this invention. In the embodiments of this invention illustrated in these figures, elements in common to each are assigned a common reference numeral for ease of understanding and continuity of expression.
The self-help rehabilitation device of this invention is particularly suitable for rehabilitation of a shoulder injury, by permitting the enabled hand and arm to progressively extend and flex the disabled appendage, through a series of movements that are choreographed and controlled in accordance with the manner in which the glove on the enabled hand is coupled to the glove on the hand associated with the disabled joint or appendage. The objective of this choreographed and controlled movement of one hand by the other is to provide rehabilitative therapy in a manner that only the injured person can experience and modulate.
Common medical terms for describing shoulder movements include flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, external rotation and internal rotation. Shoulder flexion is the movement of raising the arm straight in front of the body over the head. Extension is the movement of moving the arm straight behind the body. Abduction is the movement of raising the arm out to the side over the head while keeping the arm straight. Horizontal adduction is the movement of raising the arm to shoulder height and bringing the arm out to the side, then in front of the body and out to the side again. Internal rotation is the movement of having the elbow bent and against the side of the body and moving the forearm as close to the stomach as possible. External rotation is the movement of having the elbow bent and against the side of the body and moving the forearm and hand from a position close to the stomach out to the side of the body.
Shoulder flexion and horizontal adduction are two of the most frequent movements performed with the functional, unaffected upper extremity, which is one reason for the successful facilitation of joint approximation and proprioceptive input for a hemiplegic shoulder. In addition, joint approximation and proprioceptive input are treatments of choice for a hemiplegic shoulder, therefore, continuous, self treatment with a pair of gloves of this invention assists with expediting treatment benefits, as well as lowering rehabilitative costs to a hemiplegic patient.
As shown in each of the
In the embodiments of the invention illustrated in
In use, each glove is slipped over each hand so that the palm side of the glove corresponds to the palm side of the hand, and backhand side of the glove to the backhand side of the hand. In the preferred embodiments of this invention, the glove (10) having the open end (devoid of fingers) is place upon the disabled hand, and the glove (12) with the truncated digital portion on the enabled hand. The enabled hand is now place over the disabled hand so as to couple each of the arrays of hooks (14) and loops (16) in a specific alignment and thereby releasably couple one hand to the other. The enabled hand is moved by movement of the enabled arm. The movements of the enabled hand/arm cause corresponding extension and flexure of the joints and muscles of the disabled hand/arm. In the preferred embodiments of this invention, the alignment of the coupling means (14, 16) on one hand to the coupling means (14', 16') on the other hand is directed, (in accordance with a rehabilitation protocol), so as to orient the coupling of one hand to the other in a specific manner. The relative orientation of one hand to the other directly affects the motion to be imparted to the disabled hand/arm or the joint associated by the enabled hand/arm. Thus, in each instance, the relative orientation of one hand to the other is pre-set, in accordance with a rehabilitation objective, to effect the desired direction of movement of the disabled hand/arm.
In one of the preferred embodiments of this invention, each of the gloves are provided with indicia (not shown) for alignment of the coupling of one glove to the other, and thereby properly position the gloves to effect the desired direction and range of motion to be imparted to the disabled hand/arm. These indicia can include alpha numeric symbols, color matching and the like.
In an alternative embodiment of the self-help rehabilitative device of this invention, the complimentary gloves are depicted in
In the embodiment of the invention illustrated in
In the complimentary member (40) of the alternative embodiment of the invention illustrated in
Secure retention of each wrap to each hand is critical to permit the enabled hand to effect extension and flexure of the joints and muscles of the disabled hand/arm.
In use, each wrap is secured to each hand so that the palm side (18') of the wrap corresponds to the palm side of the hand, and backhand surface (20') of the wrap corresponds to the backhand side of the hand. In such usage, the wrap (30) is secured about the hand onto the thumb and to itself as described above so that only the array of loop (16") is exposed on the palm and backhand sides of the hand. Similarly, the wrap (40) is secured about the hand onto the thumb and to itself as described about so that only the array of hooks (14") is exposed on the palm and backhand sides of the other hand. In the alternative embodiment of this invention, the wrap (30) is placed upon the disabled hand, and the wrap (40) on the enabled hand. The enabled hand is now placed over the disabled hand so as to couple each of the arrays of hooks (14") and loops (16") in a specific alignment and thereby releasably couple one hand to the other. The enabled hand is moved by movement of the enabled arm. The movements of the enabled hand/arm cause corresponding extension and flexure of the joints and muscles of the disabled hand/arm.
The alternative embodiment shown for this invention, each of the wrap can be provided with indicia for alignment of the coupling of one wrap to the other, and thereby properly position the wraps to effect the desired direction and range of motion to be imparted to the disabled hand/arm. These indicia can include alpha numeric symbols, color matching and the like. In
The gloves/wraps and protocols associated therewith enable the administration of self-help rehabilitation to promote glenohumeral joint integrity, normalization of muscular tone, and movement for patients with hemiparesis and hemiplegia following central nervous system dysfunction.
Other objects, advantages and applications of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art when the following description of the best mode contemplated for practicing the invention is read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
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